advertisement ON THE TOWN Be the first to hear about events, promotions, and special offers from New Yorker advertisers. TEE HEE LIGHTER MOMENTS FROM THE LINKS C Q 0 q , 0 o \ " ., '. \ '\0" 0 o <::I 0, '10; \ () 0..\ o ,0, "\ .;:?^\ .. . \' . 0-"'" \ C 0 0\0 \ \ "Oh, no! Golf-ball-size hail!" '\ \ 0 o '\ ð 1 OK Hole-in-One Classic On Thursday, June 19th, between the hours of 6 P.M. and 8 P.M., New Yorker subscribers and golf lovers alike are invited to stop by The New Yorker "T ee-Hee Su ite" at the Golf Club at Chelsea Piers to shoot for a chance to win $10,000 in cash.* Thursday, June 19, 2003 6 - 8 P.M. The New Yorker "Tee-Hee Suite 17 The Golf Club at Chelsea Piers Pier 59 (23rd Street and the Hudson River) New York City Cocktails *No purchase necessary See entry form for official rules & regul. tion Limit one shot per person. Sponsored by r@ @ BUICK. Computer Associates THE OFFICIAL CAR OF GOLF THE GLENLIVET I THEVanguard:rouP. Invest m our way of mvestlng':' F or more information, log on to www.newyorker.com and click on The New Yorker Reader Link independendy The charge of expropri- ation, of both thought and idiom, was old, and dogged her at intervals during her early and middle years: she was a fraud, a puppet, a plagiarist. She was false coin. She was "a living lie." H elen Keller was eleven when these words were first hurled at her by an infuriated Michael Anagnos. What brought on this defection was a little story she had written, called "The Frost King," which she sent him as a birthday present. In the voice of a highly literary children's narrative, it recounts how the "frost fairies" cause the season's turning: When the children saw the trees all aglow with brilliant colors they clapped their hands and shouted for joy, and immediately began to pick great bunches to take home. "The leaves are as lovely as the flowers!" cried they, in their delight. Anagnos-doubtless clapping his hands and shouting for joy-immedi- ately began to publicize Helen's newest accomplishment. "The Frost King" ap- peared both in the Perkins alumni mag- azine and in another journal for the blind, which, following Anagnos, unhesitat- ingly named it "without parallel in the history of literature." But more than a parallel was at stake; the story was found to be nearly identical to "The Frost Fair- ies," by Margaret Canb)r, a writer of chil- dren's books. Anagnos was humiliated, and fled headlong from adulation to ex- coriation. Feeling personally betrayed and institutionally discredited, he arranged an inquisition for the terrified Helen, standing her alone in a room before a jury of eight Perkins officials and himself; all mercilessly cross-examining her. Her mature recollection of Anagnos's "court of investigation" registers as pitiably as the ordeal itself: Mr. Anagnos, who loved me tenderly, thinking that he had been deceived, turned a deaf ear to the pleadings of love and inno- cence. He believed, or at least suspected, that Miss Sullivan and I had deliberately stolen the bright thoughts of another and imposed them on him to win his admiration. . . . As I lay in my bed that night, I wept as I hope few chil- dren have wept. I felt so cold, I imagined I should die before morning, and the thought comforted me. I think if this sorrow had come to me when I was older, it would have broken my spirit beyond repairing. She was defended by Alexander Graham Bell, and by Mark Twain, who parodied the whole procedure with a ne ras a summer writers' conference JULY 12-18,2003 ROBERT OLEN ButLER / RITA MAE BROWN MARK DOTY / MARY PIPHER / JANE BARNES DEBRA MAGPIE EARLING / JESSE LEE KERCHEVAL TED KOOSER / PAUL LlSICKY / HILDA RAZ. EMMA SWEENEY / MARCOS VILLATORO weekend and week-long workshops in the novel, short story, poetry, memoir. and screenwriting Jonis Agee / Conference Director University of Nebraska / Lincoln NE 402.472.1834/ nswc@unl.edu http://www.nswc.org NeöiàSPa Lincoln I 1ímð Uili / . ::., $I : . : .(:: ....) ; :....." ..t:\ Indulge in luxury at Puerto Rico's finest resorr. Spectacular views, romantic guestrooms and Classic French cuisine. D fØORSET ?;!l5r-l7nalJMf.Cl 1-800-633-1857 www.horneddorset.com ."....:&: - .Z'. %. -o--:.. . All in favor... ; . .Sr. www.fishseddy.com . > Porcelain glove molds-limIted quantities! Broadway at 19th Street. Toll.free: 877.347.4733 Looking for used, rare, or out- of-print books? We have over 40 million. Try Abebooks. .;.)to ::: ):P- ... abebooks.comTM .. R . , rlïé' onest: to-goodness rope . .. . ' k from Pawleys Island .... . Æ " \':m t1ocsHammocksSC.com EX9uí ítE 'l/EnEtían hoto97-a?h}j hJLp . f):)ou9hty C a TLTLandi g aLLETL!J 138 Eít 18th t'l-Ed c::!VEW cyO'l-( cN.cy. 10011 t:212 242 0710 www.a'l-tnÛ.t2omjdou9hty.htmf THE NEW YOR.KER., JUNE 16 & 23, 2003 193